shared with the American Research and Development Corporation of Boston. The Zapata Annual
Report for 1964 is strangely silent about the other companies, with the exception of Seacat Zapata.
George Bush has always loved secrecy, and this appears to have extended to the business activities
-- or alleged business activities -- of Zapata Offshore. A small window on a whole range of secret
and semisecret activities and transactions during these years is provided by recently published
information about Bush's shady business relations with Jorge Diaz Serrano of Mhead (1976-1981) of the Mexican national oil company Pemex, who was convicted and jailed forexico, the former
defrauding the Mexican government of $58 million. During 1960, Bush and Diaz Serrano secretly
worked together to set up a Mexican drilling company called Perforaciones Marinas del Golfo, or
Permargo. At that time Diaz Serrano had been working as a salesman for Dresser Industries, Bush's
old firm. Diaz Serrano came into contact with an American oilman who wanted to drill in Mexico; anew Mexican law stipulated that drilling contracts could be awarded only to Mexican nationals. The (^)
American oilman was Edwin Pauley of Pan American Petroleum Corp. When Diaz Serrano wanted
to buy drilling equipment from Dresser Industries, Dresser demanded that Diaz take on Bush as a
co-owner in the venture. Bush's spokesman Peter Hart conceded in 1988 that Bush and Zapata had
been partners with Diaz Serrano, but alleged that the partnership had lasted for only seven months.
Diaz Serrano is very open about being a personal friend of Bush. "One remembers a man that one
likes and appreciates," says Diaz, who wanted to become the president of Mexico before he was
sentenced to five years in jail for appropriating government monies; the business dealings spawned
"a friendship of which I am most proud." In 1982, DMoscow, and he stopped off to talk with Bush in the White House on his way to his newiaz Serrano was made Mexican Ambassador to
assignment.
Bush reciprocates the friendship: "I have high regard for Jorge," Bush told People Magazine in
1981; "I consider him a friend."
One of Jorge Diaz Serrano's associates in the drilling deal was his long-time partner, Jorge
Escalante, who has also remained in contact with Bush over the intervening years, a fact that Bush's
office also confirms.
Bush was clearly dishonest in that the annual reports of Zapata Offshore do not mention this deal
with Permargo, which created a company that was in direct competition with Zapata Offshore itself,
much to the detriment of that "shareholder value" which Bush professed to hold sacred whenever
his clique of cronies was on the track of a new leveraged buyout. Bush may also have illegally
concealed his dealings from the government. The Zapata Offshore filings with the SEC between1955 and 1959 are cryptic, and the SEC files on Zapata Offshore between 1960 and 1966, when
Bush had exclusive control of the company, were destroyed by the SEC either in 1981, when Bush
had just become vice president, or somewhat later, in October, 1983, according to various SEC
officials. Perhaps these files were removed not just to protect Bush, but also to protect Zapata
Offshore as a front operation for the US intelligence community. The 1964 Zreport does note that the drilling barge NOLA I was sold "to a subsidiary of a Mexican drillingapata offshore Annual
company" because it had become "a marginal operation" in that it could only be used in the summer
because of a lack of seaworthiness in bad weather, but even this annual report does not name
Permargo, which appears to be the Mexican company that bought NOLA I. [fn 24]
Diaz recalls that Bush was a highly political businessman back in 1960: "In those days, I remember
very clearly, he was a very young chap and when we were talking business with him at his office he
spent more time on the telephone talking about politics than paying attention to the drilling affairs.
He was a born politician."